Skip to content

Press Release

Nailya Alexander Gallery, in conjunction with Contact Press Images, is honored to announce MAIN STREET: The Lost Dream of Route 66, an exhibition of photographs by Pulitzer-Prize winning photographer Edward Keating, on view November 29 to January 5. The exhibition is accompanied by the release of Keating’s eponymous book of 84 photographs (Damiani, 2018). Please join the gallery for a reception and book signing with the artist on November 29 from 6 to 8 pm.

Edward Keating has served as a photojournalist for nearly 40 years for such publications as The New York Times, Forbes, and Business Week. In 2001, Keating received the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography, as well as the John Faber Award for International Reporting, Overseas Press Club, for his series of photographs on the September 11 attacks. He additionally shared the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting with New York Times staff for the series, “How Race is Lived in America,” and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for the 1997 series “Vows,” co-authored with Lois Smith Brady. In 2003, Keating joined Contact Press Images photography agency. MAIN STREET will be Keating’s sixth monograph.

MAIN STREET is the result of eleven years of travels along Route 66 — the 2,400 mile stretch between Chicago and Santa Monica. Called the “mother road” in John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, Route 66 has inspired countless artists and writers, including Andy Warhol and Jack Kerouac. Following the path of migrant farmers and others, Keating has ventured westward and back along Route 66, documenting the lives of Americans along the way.

Keating approaches the route as both a journalist and memoirist. His photographs bring attention to the lives and myths scattered along the stretch of Route 66, and serve as a metaphor for the deterioration of middle-class America. For New York Times journalist Charles LeDuff, “this book is about those who traveled its length and those who settled along the way, wherever their bones and their broken cars dropped them.”

This book is also personal mythology, constructed from the artist’s own recollections of the road: Keating's mother grew up in Saint Louis along Route 66 where her father owned the city’s first Ford dealership. In his early 20s, he embarked on a cross-country trip on Route 66, but found himself, rock-bottom, in a broken-down motel in Flagstaff, Arizona. In 2000, he returned to Route 66 as a New York Times staff photographer, traversing all 2,400 miles in three weeks. The book is a milestone for an artist who has spent a life wandering along the main streets and back roads of America’s most mythic highway.